Title
Wage Bargaining with Endogenous Profits, Overtime Working and Heterogeneous Labor
Author(s)
Karen Mumford Karen Mumford (Princeton University)
Steve Dowrick Steve Dowrick (Warwick University)
Abstract
This paper estimates the role of insider power in wage determination in a unionized industry, examining the direction and magnitude of biases which may arise through failure to control for variation in both hours of work and the composition of the labor force and through failure to control for the endogeneity of measured profits. Furthermore, by examining the extent to which rent-sharing is related to exogenous demand shocks rather than to potentially endogenous productivity, we provide a test of the bargaining and 'pure' efficiency wage models, finding that the majority of the insider weighting can be explained by the bargaining model. Our data set covers earnings and profitability in the New South Wales coal industry from 1952 to 1987. We estimate a partial adjustment model and test for co-integration of the time series in order to establish whether or not a long-run stable equilibrium exists.
Creation Date
1990-11
Section URL ID
IRS
Paper Number
277
URL
https://dataspace.princeton.edu/bitstream/88435/dsp01gt54kn03v/1/277.pdf
File Function
Jel
H43, H44
Keyword(s)
bargaining, wage determination, rent-sharing, labor, insider power
Suppress
false
Series
1